Central Shelby
Church of Christ


 

 

Eisegesis

…is “a reading of one’s own ideas into a passage of the Bible” (World Book Dictionary). It involves approaching the Scriptures prejudicially. It is a coming to the Bible with a doctrine, rather than allowing the Bible to indoctrinate the reader. Whereas ‘exegesis’ is “a scholarly explanation or interpretation of the Bible or of a passage in the Bible,” eisegesis brings a slanted view and bias to the Holy writ.

Consequently, Eisegesis is a destructible practice. Instead of buying the truth and selling it not (Proverbs 23:23), its practitioner buys a perverted truth (which, by definition, is not the truth). This is serious, for our eternal destiny depends on our obedience to the unperverted gospel of Christ (Galatians 1:6-9; 2 Thessalonians 1:8-9).

The Scriptures are replete with illustrations of those who handled God’s word with such a bias. The Jews of Jeremiah’s day looked for prophets who were preaching “peace, peace,” rather than for spokesmen who were speaking the truth (Jeremiah 5:30-31). The Sadducees of the first century came to the ‘burning bush passage’ with the false notion that there is no resurrection (Mark 12:18-27). And then there were the Pharisees, who squinted at nearly every scripture through ‘tradition-tinted glasses.‘

If not careful, we can ourselves become guilty of the practice of eisegesis, coming to God’s word with our own preconceived notions, rather than reading the Bible for what it says.

Sadly, a great host of people seem to be employing this procedure today with Bible passages that address the subject of ‘divorce and remarriage.’ Seeking to find authority for their unscriptural relationships, they bring a slanted view to their studies. And, if they find a commentator or preacher that agrees with their thinking, their view becomes ten times more emboldened. Yet this is but one illustration. Space would not permit even a condensed listing of the things that can happen when one comes to the Bible looking for Scriptures to prove his line of thought. Nothing, it seems, is beyond twisting by such revisionism.

Brethren, beware! The one who comes to God’s word with ideas pre-fixed in his mind, who comes looking for loopholes, will be ‘successful’ every time -- to his own destruction!

May each of us strive to fulfill the charge given by Paul to young Timothy: “Be diligent to present yourself approved to God as a workman who does not need to be ashamed; handling accurately the word of truth” (2 Timothy 2:15; NASB). May we shun the practice of eisegesis.


--Mike Noble


 

 

 

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August 19, 2008

Central Shelby Church of Christ
1118 Burks Branch Road
P.O. Box 445
Shelbyville, Kentucky  40066
Phone:  (502) 647-9179